Thanks for the replys. I've posted a screen capture of my RMIR screen taken with alt print screen, but it shows up at least 3X larger in the screen shot than it does on my desktop. If it were this size on my PC I would have no problem.

The image was so big it was distorting the forum, so I have replaced it with a smaller image, but if you click on it, you will see the original._________________Rob
www.hifi-remote.comPlease don't PM me with remote questions, post them in the forums so all the experts can help!

I wonder if the clue is in the fact that alt-print produced such a big image, in other words, RMIR thinks it's got a much larger footprint than it really does, like Windows is reducing it._________________Rob
www.hifi-remote.comPlease don't PM me with remote questions, post them in the forums so all the experts can help!

Sorry, I am not sure if I understand drhendrix correctly. RMIR (just like IrScrutinizer) is a graphical tool that contains a certain number of user interface elements. It is "intended" to work as a proper, resizeable window. "Normal" size is something like 1000 x 750. If you enlarge it very much above the normal size, it looks (screen shot!) like a program that has been "ridiculously" enlarged, but handles that "ridiculous" re-sizing sensibly, adding the extra space where it makes (some) sense. It is not an "app", designed for running in full-screen mode. So I do not see a misbehavior here.

Having said that, there are two use cases that make sense:

1. Disabled users, with bad eyesight, and
2. High-DPI displays (like 3840 x 2160 on a laptop, or 1920 x 1080 at a smartphone, but NOT 1920x1080 by 24")).

Both these use cases call for scaling (or selecting larger) fonts, icons, and all other measures. Java <= 8 is considered not to be very good at this. Possibly Java 9 (which is due in late July) MAY be better; possibly there are previews/beta tests available?

I understand his complaint to be, when he opens RMIR (without any special re-sizing or anything) the text is all too small to read. We have had the same complaint from others, so it's not a one-off special case. What he sees is very similar to the screen shot above.

Searching around the net I see that other folks have similar issues with other Java applications._________________Rob
www.hifi-remote.comPlease don't PM me with remote questions, post them in the forums so all the experts can help!

Thanks for the replies. I tried the process at the link Robman provided. However, the Compatibility Administrator for Win 7 (v.5.6) does not have DPIUnaware in the Compatibility Fix List, which prevents completing the fix.

I'm looking around to see if I can find something similar for Windows 7.

I ran across this article about Windows ACT 6.0. I can't find that though. Searches always send me to Windows Assessment and Deployment Kit (ADK) for Windows® 8, which seems to be a different tool.

I think that's just the current name for the old ACT tool. this page says:

Quote:

Please note: Microsoft ACT version 5.6 is no longer actively supported. Please download the latest version from the Windows Assessment and Deployment Kit (ADK) for Windows 10 in the Related Resources section of this page.

You can download ACT 5.6 from that site._________________Rob
www.hifi-remote.comPlease don't PM me with remote questions, post them in the forums so all the experts can help!

Might I suggest a simple solution? I have the same size screen, and RMIR is perfectly legible on everything from 12" to 55" screens. But I never run it maximized. I think it will look better if you make the window half the width of your screen and 2/3rds the height. This won't increase the font size, but it won't look so sparse since all elements will be closer together, hence more legible.

Might I suggest a simple solution? I have the same size screen, and RMIR is perfectly legible on everything from 12" to 55" screens. But I never run it maximized. I think it will look better if you make the window half the width of your screen and 2/3rds the height. This won't increase the font size, but it won't look so sparse since all elements will be closer together, hence more legible.

That's the way I've been using RMIR. It's still difficult to read the cells.
Thanks